News
Service December 10, 2002
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Senator Places Hold on Bill to Amend ESA
S. 990,
introduced by Sen. Robert Smith (R-N.H.), authorizes $150 million
for a new grant program for private landowners seeking to make
changes on their land that could help ESA-listed species --
threatened, endangered and even those on the candidate list. The
landowner would apply for the grant to the Interior or Commerce
Department and, through a species recovery agreement, the landowner
would agree to perform a certain action and the government would pay
for all or part of it. Any action required by another agreement
would not be eligible, according to a Senate staffer. The
Senate originally passed S. 990 last December, also under unanimous
consent, and sent it to the House, where it languished for months
until retiring House Resources Committee Chairman James Hansen
(R-Utah) brought it to the floor at 2 a.m. Friday. His committee
held neither a hearing nor a vote on the legislation. According
to sources, several Republican committee members opposed the bill.
Opposition was scarce on the House floor, as Hansen attached a
number of smaller bills favored by Republican and Democratic
Resources Committee members (Environment & Energy
Daily, Nov. 18).
Environmental groups also favored a number of the bills added to S.
990, including one providing $25 million for an international grant
program for sea turtles, a nutria eradication program and a number
of wildlife refuge acquisitions and changes. Hansen
removed one part of S. 990, a provision amending the
Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act, because it was too
similar to the Conservation and Reinvestment Act, according to the
committee. CARA is a controversial bill to dedicate consistent
federal revenue for species conservation. The
Senate staffer said the ESA language authorizing species recovery
agreements was also taken from CARA, though that was not the part of
CARA generating controversy. S. 990 includes no mandatory funding at
all, instead requiring annual appropriations. The
American Land Rights Association maintains that S. 990 would amount
to the first changes to ESA in 14 years, all without any recorded
votes or hearings. Mike Hardiman, a lobbyist for ALRA, also
criticized Hansen for bringing up the bill in the wee hours of the
night when few were looking, and adding a number of other measures
that many members on both sides of the aisle wanted. Hardiman
said the text of the bill would result in more private land
regulation. "It changes the text of the Endangered Species Act
to cantilever out so they can regulate god-knows-how-much-more
land," he said. Creating a new species at-risk category will
mean more regulations, Hardiman said. Another group, Defenders of
Property Rights, agreed, saying species recovery agreements would be
another way the government could keep landowners from performing
otherwise legal activities on private land in the name of species
conservation. John
Kostyack of the National Wildlife Federation said S. 990 does not
mean more regulations to protect candidate species, or species
at-risk. Rather, S. 990 would provide money to private landowners
for any conservation-minded activity that would help a candidate
species and thereby help the species avoid becoming threatened or
endangered, which helps the landowner maintain his or her property
value. Keeping
candidate species off the list "is one concept there's always
been broad consensus around," Kostyack said. The
National Cattlemen's Beef Association is also concerned with both
the water rights and ESA provisions. However, according to a
spokesman for the association, NCBA has not decided whether or not
the ESA changes are incompatible with the goals of NCBA's members.
If they are, the spokesman said NCBA will be looking at ways it
could make its own changes to ESA within S. 990. Both
NCBA and the Farm Bureau sent letters to the speaker of the House
and the entire Resources Committee last week, before Hansen brought
the bill to the floor, asking to have an open debate on the bill and
not pass it by unanimous consent, according to a House staffer. A
Senate staffer confirmed that an anonymous senator has put a hold on
S. 990. According to another Senate staffer, only the senator that
places the hold can lift the hold, and if she or he does not lift
the hold before the end of session, the bill is dead. Alex
Oehler Field
Representative Office
of Congressman Wally Herger Alex.Oehler@mail.house.gov (530)
893-8363 (phone) (530)
893-8619 (facsimile) |